Welcome, $3 tier Patrons, to a Wednesday feature normally reserved for the $5+ tiers; just thought I'd show you a bit of the extra content you're missing out on! Hope you'll consider upgrading someday (HINT, HINT)!
For this week's "damsel in distress" (DiD) post, behold a gallery of images addressing my long-ago creation in Dirty Pair of a bondage trope now ubiquitous in DiD art (especially on deviantART, anyway): namely, the airborne tape drone. VWIPP!
The gallery above leads off with the best artwork, two pages from a recent-ish commissioned piece featuring Kei bedeviled by one such tape-wielding drone, as also seen below:

Update: "Recent-ish" is a bit of a stretch, as these two pages (from a longer, unfinished, not-official-continuity "story") actually appear to be ten years old. Yikes!

Now, let's jump back in time so I can blither about how this trope came to be. Time for some old, crappier artwork, folks!

The tape drone has its origins in this one page from issue #5 of 1991's Dirty Pair: A Plague of Angels, in which a run-amuck mecha is targeted with a barrage of drones streaming explosive detonation tape. The flying bots wrap the target up and blow him to hell. The end!
Well, that was the end until roughly 1996 or so, when I had to grind out a bunch of damsel-in-distress con sketches involving the Dirty Pair. I thought, "Say, remember those det-tape drones from DP: Plague #5? Well, what if they were retasked for restraint purposes?" And lo, the con sketch below, drawn on linen-finish cardstock, was the result:

Interestingly, this may be one of the earliest incarnations of the hairstyles and costumes that Kei and Yuri would wear in my final (published) Dirty Pair miniseries. Yeahp, at this time I was drawing so many con sketches and commissions of the Lovely Angels that I got bored with their existing designs and reworked 'em many times over.
Oddly, dug up a partially colored version of the same piece, using the same (Kei) markers that my buddy Joe Rosas used for the color guides on the Dirty Pair: Fatal But Not Serious miniseries:

The kindly fellow who received that con sketch liked it a fair bit, so that year I scribbled an incomplete story fragment depicting another drone encounter:


I stalled out on that scene when other work arose, but the tape drone—and the new DP outfits and hair designs I'd first drawn in these sketches, IIRC—would later reappear in an actual comic, as seen in these two pages from 1999-2000's miniseries Dirty Pair: Run from the Future. In a narrative focusing on the Lovely Angels' use of non-lethal incapacitation and restraint tech (as opposed to just blowing holes in their foes), here Kei sics the renamed "TapeBoy" drone on a hapless target:

Delightful coloring by the great Ryan Kinnaird, folks! Also, enjoy what would turn out to be the final Dirty Pair issue I'd ink; the rest of the miniseries was pencils-only, featuring so-called "digital inking" in Photoshop.
Note that the TapeBoy's tape is using Predator-style camouflage, which gets shorted out by jamming technology on the next page:

Ah, but by the final issue of the series, Kei winds up victimized by her own hijacked 3WA technology:

Skipping ahead a few pages:

Interestingly, the digital inking of my pencils varied depending on who was handling the task. Compare the above page with the next few (set a few pages later), in which the digital inking was done by, I think, the colorist Margaret Hessian, who was exceptionally good at converting my pencils to ersatz inks. Note the crisper, cleaner, more precise "pseudo-inks" below:


Mummification—and suffocation—ahoy! Ouch! (SPOILER: Worry not, Kei does indeed survive this ordeal.)
Wellp, I created the tape drone in Dirty Pair, but never did much with it after this one published scene. The trope was taken up and, I believe, primarily popularized in the work of the inventive, accomplished, and tech-savvier-than-yrs-truly DiD artist "we-r-nomad" on deviantART. Here's what might be one of the earliest tape drone images by another artist, featuring 'nomad's take on a drone-distressed Starfire.
Now, of course, the trope is ubiquitous in DiD art, thanks to its popularization and proliferation by more dedicated artists. Then again, not like I was doing anything with the idea at the time; whilst I was still struggling to maintain a career (ahem) in mainstream comics, I wasn't inclined to shout from the rooftops, "HEY, FOLKS! I INADVERTENTLY LAUNCHED A MAJOR FETISH TROPE!"—and still aren't, to be honest. Go crazy with it, DiD aficionados!
Gotta say, I'm convinced that someone in manga or American comics must've created some iteration of the tape drone long before I ever stumbled across the idea, as it seems such an obvious DiD concept. I've just never seen that previous take on the trope, wherever it might be.
Amazingly, the tape drone riff has never appeared in my bondage-intensive series Empowered, save for a single cameo in the upper left-hand corner of this montage page from vol. 7:

However, someday I'll have to discuss how Empowered's Advanced Restraint Research uses a whole bunch of concepts originally created in my literally hundreds of pages of developmental notes for unused Dirty Pair story ideas. (Some of which I might post here, down the road.) Wheeee!
SuichiTanaka
2019-11-02 01:25:39 +0000 UTCMoondai
2019-11-01 16:14:24 +0000 UTCAdam Warren
2019-10-31 17:37:53 +0000 UTCAidenke
2019-10-31 05:34:04 +0000 UTCKranberriJam
2019-10-31 00:31:55 +0000 UTCSuichiTanaka
2019-10-30 20:07:15 +0000 UTC